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Updated Sat, February 4, 2012.
151.www.theaa.com118000
152.www.lincolnshire.gov.uk112000
153.warwick.ac.uk112000
154.www.direct.gov.uk110000
155.www.londoncareers.net110000
156.www.netdoctor.co.uk107000
157.www.highways.gov.uk105000
158.www.splut.com104000
159.www.autotrader.co.uk103000
160.www.pbskids.org103000
161.www.le.ac.uk102000
162.www.thesun.co.uk99600
163.www.homeoffice.gov.uk99500
164.www.vodafone.com99100
165.www.liv.ac.uk98800
166.www.debenhams.com98700
167.www.halifax.co.uk98500
168.www.bioportfolio.com98300
169.www.northlincs.gov.uk96900
170.www.soton.ac.uk96600
171.www.maximonline.com96300
172.www.barclays.co.uk96000
173.film.guardian.co.uk95900
174.www.handbag.com93400
175.www.theargus.co.uk93000
176.www.alliance-leicester.co.uk92300
177.www.lancashire.gov.uk91800
178.www.topgear.com91700
179.www.cityoflondon.gov.uk91000
180.www.bris.ac.uk91000
181.www.fool.co.uk90400
182.www.sheffield.gov.uk90300
183.technology.guardian.co.uk88700
184.icliverpool.icnetwork.co.uk88700
185.www.hsbc.co.uk87800
186.www.nls.uk87600
187.www.radiotimes.com87000
188.www.overclockers.co.uk86500
189.www.jobs.ac.uk85900
190.www.number-10.gov.uk85600
191.www.britishcouncil.org84900
192.www.1job.co.uk84900
193.search.msn.co.uk84600
194.www.english-heritage.org.uk84600
195.www.londonmet.ac.uk84400
196.www.bsi-global.com84300
197.www.manchester.gov.uk83800
198.www.regus.com82400
199.aol.co.uk82300
200.www.royal.gov.uk81900
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151. www.theaa.com

Rating: 118000 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.theaa.com' on the other websites

www.theaa.com

The AA: Breakdown Cover, Insurance, Loans, Motoring Advice, Routes, Finance

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Hain named shadow Welsh Secretary
Neath MP Peter Hain secures a place in Labour's new shadow cabinet despite not winning enough votes from his fellow MPs.
bbc.co.uk
7/7 inquests shown last minutes of London bus bomber Hasib Hussain
CCTV footage shows Hasib Hussain pacing around outside King's Cross station, clearly unsure of what what to do next.
telegraph.co.uk
She sells sea shells
First fossil hunter - the life 200 years ago of Mary Anning
bbc.co.uk
RSPCA challenges £2m will ruling
Appeal Court judges consider the RSPCA's challenge to a ruling which overturned a will in which it was left £2m.
bbc.co.uk
Tuition fees study challenges claim that changes are progressive
Analysis shows there will be less social mobility and nearly two-thirds of graduates will pay more for their degreesThe coalition's planned reform of university funding will limit social mobility and see almost two-thirds of graduates paying much more for a degree, according to an analysis of the proposals published today. The report argues that its analysis undermines the government's claim that the changes are progressive.The "triple whammy" of higher fees, real interest rates for loans and a longer period before the debt is written off is likely to represent a bad deal for taxpayers, argues million+, a university lobby group. The changes will leave between 60% and 65% of graduates worse off, with middle-income earners hit the hardest, it says.Allowing universities to charge fees of up to £9,000 a year, with a basic threshold of £6,000, will result in many women ending up in debt for most of their working lives, while pupils from poor families will be put off applying, and mature students may also be deterred, it says.A male primary school teacher from a middle-income home could find himself between £15,000 and £25,000 worse off than today, the analysis found. On average, graduates will be approximately £5,000 worse off, the thinktank argues, based on economic modelling carried out by international consultancy London Economics.Million+, which represents 28 former polytechnics, said the findings discredited the coalition's insistence that the moves were progressive and would boost social mobility.The report points out that, although ministers will raise the amount graduates must be earning before they start repaying loans – from £15,000 to £21,000 – the higher figure refers to earnings in 2015-16, when it will be worth less than in today's money.And it claims that the changes – which will also see state funding for university teaching cut by 80% by 2014-15 – will leave taxpayers worse off because the government will have to borrow more to fund higher loans and pick up a bigger bill for debts that are written off after 30 years. Write-off costs are likely to rise from 27.5p in the pound to at least 36p, it estimates."It is difficult to see how the proposals provide a long-term, sustainable framework for the funding of higher education and universities in England," the report says.It also accuses the government of using simplistic measures to define social mobility, such as the number of students on free school meals who go to Oxford, rather than assessing whether a having degree helps those from deprived backgrounds get better jobs.An Ipsos Mori poll last week found that fees of £6,000 a year – the coalition's proposed basic threshold from 2012 – will lead to a dramatic fall in the number of students from disadvantaged families going to university."There is undoubtedly a real risk that participation in higher education and, in particular, participation by those from lower socio-economic groups and mature students will be undermined," the million+ report says.Professor Les Ebdon, who chaired the group, said the findings showed there were "no real winners" from the proposals."Even where graduates benefit from making lower monthly repayments than at present, many more of them will never repay their loans," said Pam Tatlow, the chief executive of million+."The 25% of students who enter university in their 20s and as mature students are particularly adversely affected. A women entering employment as a primary school teacher at the age of 30 would … never repay and would still have outstanding debts of more than £21,000 at the end of the 30-year write-off period."Dr Gavan Conlon, of London Economics, said: "There has been a very narrow focus on the loan system when considering progressiveness. What matters to students and their families is the total cost associated with participation in higher education."Aaron Porter, the president of the NUS, said: "Rather than seeking to steamroller proposals through parliament without proper scrutiny, ministers should rethink this reckless approach and tackle the number of serious questions that require answers."Tuition feesHigher educationStudentsCuts and closuresStudent financeRachel Williamsguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk